Fault-tolerant execution of error-corrected quantum algorithms
Michael A. Perlin, Zichang He, Anthony Alexiades Armenakas, Pablo Andres-Martinez, Tianyi Hao, Dylan Herman, Yuwei Jin, Karl Mayer, Chris Self, David Amaro, Ciaran Ryan-Anderson, and Ruslan Shaydulin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first fault-tolerant, error-corrected execution of quantum algorithms on trapped-ion processors, showing performance improvements and scalability with logical qubits and gates, advancing towards practical quantum computing.
Contribution
It presents the first end-to-end fault-tolerant execution of quantum algorithms using the Steane code on real hardware, including implementation of logical T gates and active error correction.
Findings
Performance improvements with increased QAOA layers and T gates.
Logical circuits with up to 8 qubits perform comparably to unencoded circuits.
Successful execution of large-scale logical quantum circuits with better-than-random results.
Abstract
Scaling up quantum algorithms to tackle high-impact problems in science and industry requires quantum error correction and fault tolerance. While progress has been made in experimentally realizing error-corrected primitives, the end-to-end execution of logical quantum algorithms using only fault-tolerant (FT) components has remained out of reach. We demonstrate the FT and error-corrected execution of two quantum algorithms, the Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) and the Harrow-Hassidim-Lloyd (HHL) algorithm applied to the Poisson equation, on Quantinuum H2 and Helios trapped-ion quantum processors using the Steane code. For QAOA circuits on 5 and 6 logical qubits, we show performance improvements from increasing the number of QAOA layers and the number of gates used to approximate logical rotations, despite increased physical circuit complexity. We further…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Radiation Effects in Electronics · Quantum Information and Cryptography
